How bees can keep the peace between elephants and humans Lucy King

Ever since I can remember,

African elephants have filled me
with a sense of complete awe.

They are the largest land mammal
alive today on planet Earth,

weighing up to seven tons,

standing three and a half meters
tall at the shoulder.

They can eat up to 400 kilos
of food in a day,

and they disperse vital plant seeds
across thousands of kilometers

during their 50-to-60-year life span.

Central to their compassionate
and complex society are the matriarchs.

These female, strong leaders
nurture the young

and navigate their way
through the challenges of the African bush

to find food, water and security.

Their societies are so complex,

we’re yet to still fully tease apart

how they communicate,
how they verbalize to each other,

how their dialects work.

And we don’t really understand yet
how they navigate the landscape,

remembering the safest places
to cross a river.

I’m pretty sure that like me,

most of you in this room
have a similar positive emotional response

to these most magnificent of all animals.

It’s really hard not to have
watched a documentary,

learned about their intelligence

or, if you’ve been lucky,
to see them for yourselves

on safari in the wild.

But I wonder how many of you

have been truly,
utterly terrified by them.

I was lucky to be brought up
in Southern Africa

by two teacher parents

who had long holidays
but very short budgets.

And so we used to take
our old Ford Cortina Estate,

and with my sister, we’d pile in the back,

take our tents and go camping
in the different game reserves

in Southern Africa.

It really was heaven for a young,
budding zoologist like myself.

But I remember even at that young age

that I found the tall electric fences
blocking off the game parks

quite divisive.

Sure, they were keeping elephants
out of the communities,

but they also kept communities
out of their wild spaces.

It really was quite a challenge to me
at that young age.

It was only when I moved to Kenya
at the age of 14,

when I got to connect to the vast,
wild open spaces of East Africa.

And it is here now
that I feel truly, instinctively,

really at home.

I spent many, many happy years
studying elephant behavior in a tent,

in Samburu National Reserve,

under the guideship of professor
Fritz Vollrath and Iain Douglas-Hamilton,

studying for my PhD and understanding
the complexities of elephant societies.

But now, in my role as head
of the human-elephant coexistence program

for Save the Elephants,

we’re seeing so much change
happening so fast

that it’s urged a change
in some of our research programs.

No longer can we just sit
and understand elephant societies

or study just how to stop the ivory trade,

which is horrific and still ongoing.

We’re having to change
our resources more and more

to look at this rising problem
of human-elephant conflict,

as people and pachyderms compete
for space and resources.

It was only as recently as the 1970s

that we used to have 1.2 million elephants
roaming across Africa.

Today, we’re edging closer
to only having 400,000 left.

And at the same time period,
the human population has quadrupled,

and the land is being
fragmented at such a pace

that it’s really hard to keep up with.

Too often, these migrating elephants
end up stuck inside communities,

looking for food and water

but ending up breaking open water tanks,

breaking pipes

and, of course, breaking
into food stores for food.

It’s really a huge challenge.

Can you imagine the terror

of an elephant literally
ripping the roof off your mud hut

in the middle of the night

and having to hold your children away

as the trunk reaches in,
looking for food in the pitch dark?

These elephants
also trample and eat crops,

and this is traditionally eroding away

that tolerance that people
used to have for elephants.

And sadly, we’re losing
these animals by the day

and, in some countries, by the hour –

to not only ivory poaching

but this rapid rise
in human-elephant conflict

as they compete for space and resources.

It’s a massive challenge.

I mean, how do you keep
seven-ton pachyderms,

that often come in groups of 10 or 12,

out of these very small rural farms

when you’re dealing with people

who are living
on the very edge of poverty?

They don’t have big budgets.

How do you resolve this issue?

Well, one issue is, you can just start
to build electric fences,

and this is happening across Africa,

we’re seeing this more and more.

But they are dividing up areas
and blocking corridors.

And I’m telling you, these elephants
don’t think much of it either,

particularly if they’re blocking
a really special water hole

where they need water,

or if there’s a very attractive
female on the other side.

It doesn’t take long
to knock down one of these poles.

And as soon as there’s a gap in the fence,

they go back, talk to their mates

and suddenly they’re all through,

and now you have 12 elephants
on the community side of the fence.

And now you’re really in trouble.

People keep trying to come up
with new designs for electric fences.

Well, these elephants
don’t think much of those either.

(Laughter)

So rather than having these hard-line,
straight, electric,

really divisive migratory-blocking fences,

there must be other ways
to look at this challenge.

I’m much more interested in holistic
and natural methods

to keep elephants and people
apart where necessary.

Simply talking to people,

talking to rural pastoralists
in northern Kenya

who have so much knowledge about the bush,

we discovered this story that they had
that elephants would not feed on trees

that had wild beehives in them.

Now this was an interesting story.

As the elephants
were foraging on the tree,

they would break branches
and perhaps break open a wild beehive.

And those bees would fly out
of their natural nests

and sting the elephants.

Now if the elephants got stung,

perhaps they would remember
that this tree was dangerous

and they wouldn’t come back
to that same site.

It seems impossible that they could be
stung through their thick skin –

elephant skin is around
two centimeters thick.

But it seems that they sting them
around the watery areas,

around the eyes, behind the ears,
in the mouth, up the trunk.

You can imagine they would
remember that very quickly.

And it’s not really one sting
that they’re scared of.

African bees have a phenomenal ability:

when they sting in one site,
they release a pheromone

that triggers the rest of the bees
to come and sting the same site.

So it’s not one beesting
that they’re scared of –

it’s perhaps thousands of beestings,

coming to sting in the same area –
that they’re afraid of.

And of course, a good matriarch

would always keep her young
away from such a threat.

Young calves have much thinner skins,

and it’s potential
that they could be stung

through their thinner skins.

So for my PhD,
I had this unusual challenge

of trying to work out

how African elephants
and African bees would interact,

when the theory was
that they wouldn’t interact at all.

How was I going to study this?

Well, what I did was I took the sound
of disturbed African honey bees,

and I played it back to elephants
resting under trees

through a wireless speaker system,

so I could understand how they would react
as if there were wild bees in the area.

And it turns out that they react
quite dramatically

to the sound of African wild bees.

Here we are, playing the bee sounds
back to this amazing group of elephants.

You can see the ears going up, going out,

they’re turning their heads
from side to side,

one elephant is flicking her trunk
to try and smell.

There’s another elephant
that kicks one of calves on the ground

to tell it to get up
as if there is a threat.

And one elephant triggers a retreat,

and soon the whole family of elephants
are running after her

across the savannah in a cloud of dust.

(Sound of bees buzzing)

(Sound of bees ends)

Now I’ve done this experiment
many, many times,

and the elephants almost always flee.

Not only do they run away,

but they dust themselves
as they’re running,

as if to knock bees out of the air.

And we placed infrasonic microphones
around the elephants

as we did these experiments.

And it turns out they’re communicating
to each other in infrasonic rumbles

to warn each other of the threat of bees

and to stay away from the area.

So these behavioral discoveries

really helped us understand
how elephants would react

should they hear or see bee sounds.

This led me to invent a novel design
for a beehive fence,

which we are now building around small,
one-to-two-acre farms

on the most vulnerable
frontline areas of Africa

where humans and elephants
are competing for space.

These beehive fences
are very, very simple.

We use 12 beehives and 12 dummy hives

to protect one acre of farmland.

Now a dummy hive
is simply a piece of plywood

which we cut into squares, paint yellow

and hang in between the hives.

We’re basically tricking the elephants

into thinking there are more beehives
than there really are.

And of course, it literally
halves the cost of the fence.

So there’s a hive and a dummy hive

and a beehive and now dummy hive,

every 10 meters
around the outside boundary.

They’re held up by posts

with a shade roof to protect the bees,

and they’re interconnected
with a simple piece of plain wire,

which goes all the way around,
connecting the hives.

So if an elephant tries to enter the farm,

he will avoid the beehive at all cost,

but he might try and push through
between the hive and the dummy hive,

causing all the beehives to swing
as the wire hits his chest.

And as we know from our research work,

this will cause the elephants
to flee and run away –

and hopefully remember
not to come back to that risky area.

The bees swarm out of the hive,

and they really scare the elephants away.

These beehive fences we’re studying
using things like camera traps

to help us understand
how elephants are responding

to them at night time,

which is when most
of the crop raiding occurs.

And we found in our study farms

that we’re keeping
up to 80 percent of elephants

outside of the boundaries of these farms.

And the bees and the beehive fences
are also pollinating the fields.

So we’re having a great reduction
both in elephant crop raids

and a boost in yield
through the pollination services

that the bees are giving
to the crops themselves.

The strength of the beehive fences
is really important –

the colonies have to be very strong.

So we’re trying to help farmers
grow pollinator-friendly crops

to boost their hives,

boost the strength of their bees

and, of course, produce
the most amazing honey.

This honey is so valuable as an extra
livelihood income for the farmers.

It’s a healthy alternative to sugar,

and in our community,

it’s a very valuable present
to give a mother-in-law,

which makes it almost priceless.

(Laughter)

We now bottle up this honey,

and we’ve called this wild beautiful honey
Elephant-Friendly Honey.

It is a fun name,

but it also attracts
attention to our project

and helps people understand
what we’re trying to do

to save elephants.

We’re working now with so many women

in over 60 human-elephant conflict sites

in 19 countries in Africa and Asia

to build these beehive fences,

working very, very closely
with so many farmers

but particularly now with women farmers,

helping them to live better
in harmony with elephants.

One of the things we’re trying to do
is develop a toolbox of options

to live in better harmony
with these massive pachyderms.

One of those issues
is to try and get farmers,

and women in particular,

to think different
about what they’re planting

inside their farms as well.

So we’re looking at planting crops

that elephants don’t particularly
want to eat, like chillies,

ginger, Moringa, sunflowers.

And of course, the bees and the beehive
fences love these crops too,

because they have beautiful flowers.

One of these plants
is a spiky plant called sisal –

you may know this here as jute.

And this amazing plant
can be stripped down

and turned into a weaving product.

We’re working with these amazing women now

who live daily with
the challenges of elephants

to use this plant to weave into baskets

to provide an alternative income for them.

We’ve just started construction
only three weeks ago

on a women’s enterprise center

where we’re going to be working
with these women

not only as expert beekeepers

but as amazing basket weavers;

they’re going to be processing
chili oils, sunflower oils,

making lip balms and honey,

and we’re somewhere on our way
to helping these participating farmers

live with better eco-generating projects
that live and work better

with living with elephants.

So whether it’s matriarchs

or mothers or researchers like myself,

I do see more women
coming to the forefront now

to think differently and more boldly
about the challenges that we face.

With more innovation,

and perhaps with some more empathy
towards each other,

I do believe we can move
from a state of conflict with elephants

to true coexistence.

Thank you.

(Applause)

从我记事起,

非洲象就让我
充满了敬畏之情。

它们是当今地球上最大的陆地哺乳动物

重达七吨,

肩高三米半

它们一天可以吃掉多达 400 公斤
的食物

,它们在 50 到 60 年的生命周期中将重要的植物种子
传播到数千公里之外

他们富有同情心
和复杂社会的核心是女族长。

这些强大的女性领导人
培养年轻人,


在非洲丛林的挑战

中找到食物、水和安全。

他们的社会如此复杂,

我们还没有完全弄清楚

他们是如何交流的,
他们是如何相互交流的,

他们的方言是如何运作的。

而且我们还不真正
了解他们如何在风景中航行,

记住最安全
的过河地点。

我很确定,和我一样,

这个房间里的大多数人对这些最壮观的动物
都有类似的积极情绪反应

真的很难不
看过一部纪录片,

了解他们的智慧,

或者,如果你幸运的话,

在野外的野生动物园中亲眼看到他们。

但我想知道你们中

有多少人真的
被他们吓坏了。

我很幸运
在南部非洲

被两位教师父母抚养长大

,他们的假期很长,
但预算非常有限。

所以我们过去常常带着
我们的旧福特科尔蒂娜庄园,

和我姐姐一起,我们会堆在后面,

带上我们的帐篷,去南部非洲
不同的野生动物保护区露营

对于
像我这样的年轻、崭露头角的动物学家来说,这真是天堂。

但我记得即使在我很小的时候

,我就发现高高的电栅栏
挡住了游戏公园,造成了

很大的分歧。

当然,他们将大象
拒之门外,

但他们也将社区
拒之门外。

在我这么年轻的时候,这对我来说确实是一个很大的挑战

直到我 14 岁移居肯尼亚时,我才开始接触

到东非广阔而
狂野的开放空间。

正是在这里
,我真正地、本能地、真正地感到

宾至如归。

在 Fritz Vollrath 教授和 Iain Douglas-Hamilton 的指导下,我在桑布鲁国家保护区的一个帐篷里度过了许多快乐的岁月,
研究大象的行为

攻读博士学位并了解
大象社会的复杂性。

但是现在,作为拯救大象
的人象共存项目的

负责人,

我们看到如此多的变化
发生得如此之快

,以至于我们敦促
我们改变一些研究项目。

我们再也不能只是坐下
来了解大象社会

或研究如何阻止象牙贸易,

这是可怕的并且仍在继续。 随着人类和厚皮动物争夺空间和资源,

我们不得不
越来越多地改变我们的资源

来看待这个日益严重
的人象冲突问题

直到 1970 年代

,我们才有 120 万头大象
在非洲漫游。

今天,我们正
接近只剩下 400,000 个。

与此同时
,人口翻了两番

,土地
碎片化的

速度实在难以跟上。

很多时候,这些迁徙的大象
最终被困在社区内,

寻找食物和水,

但最终打破了打开的水箱,

打破了管道

,当然,还
闯入了食品商店获取食物。

这真的是一个巨大的挑战。

你能想象

一头大象在半夜
从你的泥屋里撕下屋顶

,在树干伸进去的时候把你的孩子抱在外面


在漆黑的黑暗中寻找食物的恐惧吗?

这些大象
还践踏和吃庄稼

,这在传统上正在侵蚀

人们
过去对大象的宽容。

可悲的是,我们每天都在失去
这些动物

,在某些国家,甚至每小时都在失去这些动物

——不仅是象牙偷猎,

还有随着它们争夺空间和资源而迅速增加
的人象冲突

这是一个巨大的挑战。

我的意思是,当你与生活在贫困边缘的人打交道时,你如何从这些非常小的农村农场中饲养出
7 吨重的厚皮动物

,这些动物通常以 10 或 12

只为一组

他们没有大笔预算。

你如何解决这个问题?

嗯,一个问题是,你可以
开始建造电围栏

,这正在整个非洲发生,

我们越来越多地看到这种情况。

但他们正在划分区域
并封锁走廊。

我告诉你,这些大象
也不怎么想,

特别是如果它们堵住
了一个非常特殊的水洞

,它们需要水,

或者另一边有一个非常有吸引力的
雌性。

用不了多久
就可以击倒其中一根杆子。

一旦栅栏出现空隙,

它们就会返回,与它们的同伴交谈

,突然间它们就全部通过了

,现在
栅栏的社区一侧有 12 头大象。

现在你真的有麻烦了。

人们一直在努力
想出新的电围栏设计。

好吧,这些大象
也不怎么想这些。

(笑声)

因此,与其拥有这些强硬的、
笔直的、电动的、

真正分裂的、阻隔迁徙的围栏,

还必须有其他方式
来看待这一挑战。

我对在必要时

将大象和人
分开的整体和自然方法更感兴趣。

简单地与人们交谈,


肯尼亚北部

对丛林非常了解的农村牧民交谈,

我们发现了这个故事,他们
认为大象不会以长

有野生蜂箱的树木为食。

这是一个有趣的故事。

当大象
在树上觅食时,

它们会折断树枝
,也许还会打开一个野生蜂箱。

那些蜜蜂会
飞出它们的天然巢穴

并蜇大象。

现在如果大象被蜇了,

也许他们会记得
这棵树很危险

,他们就不会再
回到那个地方了。

他们似乎不可能被
它们厚厚的皮肤刺伤——

大象的皮肤大约有
两厘米厚。

但似乎它们会
在水域

周围、眼睛周围、耳朵后面
、嘴巴、躯干上方刺痛它们。

你可以想象他们会
很快记住这一点。

他们害怕的并不是真正的
刺痛。

非洲蜜蜂有一种非凡的能力:

当它们蜇到一个部位时,
它们会释放一种信息素

,触发其余的蜜蜂
来蜇同一个部位。

所以他们害怕的不是一只蜜蜂

——可能是成千上万只蜜蜂

在同一地区蜇人——
它们害怕。

当然,一个好的女族长

总是会让她的孩子
远离这样的威胁。

小牛的皮肤要薄得多,

它们的皮肤很薄,很
可能会被蜇伤

所以对于我的博士学位,
我遇到了一个不同寻常的挑战

,即试图

弄清楚非洲大象
和非洲蜜蜂如何相互作用,

而理论是
它们根本不会相互作用。

我要怎么研究这个?

好吧,我所做的就是录
下受到干扰的非洲蜜蜂的声音,

然后通过无线扬声器系统将它回放给
在树下休息的大象

这样我就可以了解它们会如何反应
,就好像该地区有野蜂一样。

事实证明,它们

对非洲野蜂的声音反应非常强烈。

我们在这里,
向这群令人惊叹的大象播放蜜蜂的声音。

你可以看到耳朵竖起来,向外伸出,

它们的头
左右转动,

一头大象正在轻弹她的鼻子
试图闻一闻。

还有一头
大象用脚踢地上的一只小牛,

让它站起来
,好像有威胁一样。

一只大象引发了撤退

,很快整个大象家族

在一片尘土中穿过大草原追赶她。

(蜜蜂嗡嗡声)

(蜜蜂声结束)

现在我已经做了
很多很多次这个实验

,大象几乎总是逃跑。

它们不仅会逃跑,

还会在奔跑

时给自己抹去灰尘,就好像要把蜜蜂从空中击落一样。

在进行这些实验时,我们在大象周围放置了次声波麦克风。

事实证明,他们正在
用次声隆隆声相互交流,

以警告对方蜜蜂的威胁

并远离该地区。

因此,这些行为发现

确实帮助我们了解
了大象在

听到或看到蜜蜂的声音时会如何反应。

这促使我发明了一种新颖
的蜂巢围栏设计

,我们现在正在非洲最脆弱的前线地区的
一到两英亩的小农场周围建造

,人类和大象
正在争夺空间。

这些蜂巢围栏
非常非常简单。

我们用12个蜂箱和12个假蜂箱

来保护一英亩的农田。

现在,虚拟蜂巢
只是一块胶合板

,我们将其切成正方形,涂成黄色

并挂在蜂巢之间。

我们基本上是在欺骗大象,让他们

认为蜂箱
比实际数量要多。

当然,它实际上
将围栏的成本减半。

所以有一个蜂巢和一个虚拟蜂巢

和一个蜂巢,现在是虚拟蜂巢,

每 10 米
在外部边界周围。

它们由

带有遮荫屋顶的柱子支撑以保护蜜蜂

,它们
用一根简单的普通电线相互连接,

这条电线一直绕着
蜂箱连接。

因此,如果一头大象试图进入农场,

他会不惜一切代价避开蜂箱,

但他可能会尝试
在蜂箱和假蜂箱之间穿过

,当电线击中他的胸膛时,导致所有蜂箱摆动。

正如我们从研究工作中得知的那样,

这将导致
大象逃跑——

并希望记住
不要回到那个危险的地区。

蜜蜂从蜂巢里蜂拥而出

,它们真的把大象吓跑了。

我们正在研究这些蜂巢围栏,
使用诸如相机陷阱之类的东西

来帮助我们
了解大象

在夜间对它们的反应,

这是
大多数作物袭击发生的时间。

我们在研究农场

发现,我们将
多达 80% 的大象饲养

在这些农场的边界之外。

蜜蜂和蜂巢栅栏
也在为田地授粉。

因此,我们大大减少
了大象对作物的袭击,


通过

蜜蜂
为作物本身提供的授粉服务提高了产量。

蜂巢栅栏的
强度非常重要

——蜂群必须非常坚固。

因此,我们正在努力帮助农民
种植对传粉媒介友好的作物,

以增加他们的蜂巢、

增强蜜蜂的力量

,当然,还可以生产
出最神奇的蜂蜜。

这种蜂蜜对于农民来说是一种额外的
生计收入,非常有价值。

它是糖的健康替代品

,在我们的社区中,

送给岳母是非常有价值的礼物

这使它几乎无价。

(笑声)

我们现在把这种蜂蜜装瓶

,我们把这种野生美丽的蜂蜜叫做
大象友好蜂蜜。

这是一个有趣的名字,

但它也吸引了
人们对我们项目的关注,

并帮助人们
了解我们

为拯救大象所做的努力。

我们现在正在与非洲和亚洲 19 个国家

的 60 多个人象冲突地点的众多女性合作,

以建造这些蜂巢围栏,

与如此多的农民非常非常密切地合作

,尤其是现在与女性农民合作,

帮助她们生活 更好
地与大象和谐相处。

我们正在尝试做
的一件事是开发一个选项工具箱,

以更好地
与这些大型厚皮动物和谐相处。

其中一个问题
是试图让农民

,特别是女性,

对他们在农场内种植的东西也有不同

的看法。

所以我们正在考虑

种植大象不特别
想吃的作物,比如辣椒、

生姜、辣木、向日葵。

当然,蜜蜂和蜂巢
栅栏也喜欢这些作物,

因为它们有美丽的花朵。

其中一种植物
是一种叫做剑麻的尖刺植物——

你可能在这里知道它是黄麻。

这种神奇的植物
可以被剥离

并变成一种编织产品。

我们现在正在与这些了不起的女性合作,她们

每天都生活
在大象的挑战中

,使用这种植物编织成篮子

,为她们提供替代收入。 三周前,

我们刚刚开始建设

一个女性企业中心

,我们将
与这些女性一起工作,

不仅是专业的养蜂人,

而且是出色的篮筐编织工;

他们将加工
辣椒油、葵花籽油、

制作润唇膏和

蜂蜜,我们
正在帮助这些参与的农民

通过更好的生态生成项目
生活,与大象一起生活和工作得更好

因此,无论是女家长

、母亲还是像我这样的研究人员,

我确实看到越来越多的女性
走到了最前沿,

以不同的方式、更大胆地
思考我们面临的挑战。

有了更多的创新

,也许对彼此有了更多的同情

我相信我们可以
从与大象的冲突状态

转变为真正的共存。

谢谢你。

(掌声)